2. Ancient centuries: town doctors
Middle Age: church’s aid
Renaissance: medieval associations of craftsmen and merchants
(Guilds) bought medical services
1881, Germany, Chancellor Bismarck - first national medical
insurance programme for workers and military
Evolution of HS
3. 1888 - Austria, 1891 - Hungary, 1910 - Norway
1911, Great Britain, Prime Minister David Lloyd-George - national
health insurance system
1918, USSR, Semashko N.A. - free health care for all
4. 1942 – GB, national Emergency Medical Services, hospitals escaped
from bankruptcy resulting from the Great Depression
W. Beveridge – programme post-war social reconstruction outlined
future national health system (1948)
1946 – Canada, tax based national health insurance
1965 - USA, Medicaid, Medicare
5. Health vs. Health Care
◦ Health refers to a state of the human body and mind
◦ Health Care refers to chemicals, devices, and services used by people to
improve their health
Health insurance
◦ A system of paying for unpredictable needs for health care
Important Distinctions
6. Economic systems
◦ a collection of economic units, agents, and institutions that interact
coherently; adapting and adjusting to the social and physical environment
Health systems
◦ economic systems that are concerned with human health
Definition of systems
7. Economic Units
◦ groups of individuals brought together for a common purpose
Economic Agent
◦ an individual with a specific role in the system, e.g. a patient, a nurse, a
manager
Institutions
◦ Norms, rules of conduct, established procedures e.g. property, corporations,
paying fines, tipping waiters
Basic Definitions
8. Health Systems
Units Agents Institutions
Basic Health
Subsystem
Organ Systems Organs Physiology
Health Service
Delivery
Clinics
Hospitals
Laboratories
Doctors
Nurses
Administrators
Professional
autonomy
Peer review
Health
Information
Systems
Sentinel
laboratories
Reporting from
districts
Health surveys
Registration
clerks
Survey data
collectors
Data quality check
systems
Dissemination
procedures
Evidence to policy
9. Centrality of Health Services
Health Services
Delivery
Households
Governance
Health Financing
Health Workforce
Supplies
10. Participants In National Health Systems
Government - national, state and local health authorities;
Employers - through negotiated heath benefits for employees;
Insurers - public, not-for-profit and private for-profit;
Patients, clients or consumers - as individuals or groups - population; Risk groups - persons
with special risk factors for disease e.g. age, poverty;
Not-for-profit and for-profit providers: hospitals, managed care plans, medical, dental,
nursing, laboratories, others;
Teaching and research institutions;
Professional associations;
Social security systems;
Political parties;
Advocacy groups - age, disease, poverty or public interest groups;
The media;
Economies - national, regional and local;
International health organizations and movements;
Pharmaceutical and medical technology industries.
11. Governments, Markets, NGOs affect Reach
Governments (MOH)
◦ Government decides location of workers located in space
◦ “Command and control” incentives
◦ Service obligations
◦ Constructing, buying, new facilities
◦ Political factors and population needs enter these decisions
Markets
◦ Primary service agents seeking revenue
◦ Looking for patients with ability and willingness to pay
◦ Assessing competition
NGOs
◦ Organizations locate facilities and hire staff
◦ Population needs and organizational convenience enter decisions
◦ Impact capacity of governments and markets by hiring away their staff
12. Government Institutions
Hierarchical levels of decision making
◦ Center, province, district
◦ Decision-making can be centralized or decentralized
Budgets need to be allocated across primary, secondary, and tertiary
services
◦ National hospitals, provincial hospitals, health stations
◦ Costs escalate at hospitals
13. Hospitals
Hospitals and politics
◦ Hospitals have economic gravity
◦ Impact hundreds of health worker livelihoods
◦ Supply chains and financing infrastructures are hard to change
◦ Hospitals have political gravity
◦ Civic pride
◦ Sense of security for middle/upper class
Hospitals have limited preventive impact, limited relevance to 98% of
clinical problems
14. Population, GNI per Capita, Health Facilities and Utilization and
Health Indicators, 2015-20
Countries
Population
(millions)
2018
Health
expenditure per
capita US $ /% of
GDP, 2017
% GNI
for
Health
2018
Hospital
Beds/100
0 2015
Average
Length of
Stay (days)
2017
Maternal
mortality/
100,000 live
births, 2017
Infant
Mortality/ 1,000
live births
2018
Life
expecta
ncy,
2018
USA 326.7 10,246/17.1 13.5 2.9 5.5 19 6 79
India 1352,6 69/3.5 9.2 0.7 4.3 145 30 69
Kyrgyz R. 6.5 79 /6.2 8.6 4.5 5.2 60 17 71
Pakistan 212.2 45/2.9 10.4 0.8 6 140 57 67
Finland 5.5 4,206/9.2 7.2 4.4 6.4 3 1 82
Denmark 5.8 5,800/ 10.1 7.4 2.5 6.1 4 4 81
Israel 8.9 3,145/7.4 8.0 2.4 5.1 3 3 83
UK 66.5 3,859/9.6 6.7 2.8 5.9 7 4 81
15. Basic functions of a state
• Financing
• Resources provision
• Monitoring and scientific investigations
• Regulation and epidemiological control
• Health protection and health promotion
• State policy in public health protection
Regulation, political assurance
Objectives/goals of national public health
Social policy
16. Types of national health systems
Type Financing
Source
Administration
Bismarckian health
insurance through
social security e.g.
Germany, Japan,
France, Austria,
Belgium,
Switzerland, Israel
Compulsory
employer-
employee tax
payment to Sick
Funds or
through Social
Security
Germany - governments
regulate Sick Funds which
pay private services; strong
Sick Fund and doctor's
syndicates; Israel's Sick Funds
compete as HMOs with per
capita payments for
mandatory basket of services
19. Beveridge
National Health
Service e.g. United
Kingdom, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark,
Italy, Spain,
Portugal, Greece
Government - taxes
and revenues;
UK national financing
Nordic countries
combine national,
regional and local
taxation
Central planning, decentralized
management of hospitals, GP service
and public health; integrated district
health systems with capitation
financing in UK
Semashko national
health systems
e.g. former USSR
Government - taxes
and revenues;
post Soviet national
health insurance
Central government planning and
control; Financing by fixed norms per
population; allocation of facilities and
manpower promote increase in
hospital beds and medical staff; Post
1990 reforms emphasize
decentralization with capitation and
compulsory health insurance i.e.
payroll taxation
20. Douglas national
health insurance
through government
e.g. Canada, Australia
Taxation - cost-
sharing between
provincial and
federal
governments
Provincial government
administration; federal government
regulation; medical services paid by
fee-for-service; hospitals on block
budgets; reforms to regionalize and
integrate services
Mixed private/public
system e.g. United
States;
Latin America (e.g
Colombia),
Asia (e.g Philippines)
and African countries
(e.g. Nigeria)
Private social
insurance
through
employment and
public insurance
through Social
Security for
specific
population
groups
Strong government regulation (US);
mixed private medical services,
public and private hospitals,
state/county preventive services;
DRG payment to hospitals, rapid
increase in managed care;
extension of Medicaid coverage